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1.
The hormonal and nutritional regulation of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH; EC 1.1.1.49) was studied in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes maintained in a chemically defined medium. Inoculation of hepatocytes from starved rats into primary cultures resulted in a 4-5-fold increase in G6PDH activity in 48 h in the absence of hormones. Parallel cultures treated simultaneously with glucocorticoids and insulin exhibited a 12-15-fold increase during the same time. Glucocorticoids by themselves did not elevate G6PDH activity, whereas insulin alone significantly stimulated enzyme activity. Thus the glucocorticoids acted in a 'permissive' role to amplify the insulin stimulation of G6PDH. Elevated concentrations of glucose in the culture medium increased enzyme activity in both the control cultures and those treated with hormones. Ethanol was found to potentiate G6PDH activity in cultures treated with glucocorticoids and insulin. The effect of ethanol was time- and dose-dependent. These results establish that insulin, glucocorticoids, glucose and ethanol interact in some undefined manner to regulate hepatic G6PDH activity.  相似文献   

2.
The levels of functional mRNA encoding glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH; EC 1.1.1.49) were examined in hepatocytes from fasted and fasted/carbohydrate-refed rats and in hepatocytes inoculated into primary culture. Functional G6PDH mRNA was assessed in a cell-free protein synthesis system in vitro. We observed that hepatocytes from fasted/carbohydrate-refed rats had a 12-fold higher level of mRNA than did hepatocytes from fasted rats. The possibility that the adrenal glucocorticoids and insulin were responsible for the increase in G6PDH mRNA in refed rats was examined by studying the effect of insulin and the synthetic glucocorticoid, dexamethasone, on the level of functional G6PDH mRNA in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes maintained in a chemically defined medium. Hepatocytes from fasted rats were inoculated into primary culture and maintained for 48 h either in the absence of hormones or in the presence of insulin alone, dexamethasone alone or both hormones together. We observed that dexamethasone alone caused a fourfold increase in G6PDH mRNA while insulin caused about a twofold increase. Both hormones together elicited an increase that was additive. A comparison of functional G6PDH mRNA levels with the effect of the hormones on G6PDH activity and relative rate of enzyme synthesis suggests that the glucocorticoid elevates the level of G6PDH mRNA within the cell without causing a concommitant increase in the rate of synthesis of the enzyme or the level of G6PDH activity. The results obtained with the primary cultures of hepatocytes indicate that insulin and the glucocorticoids are probably involved with the regulation of hepatic G6PDH mRNA. However, involvement of other hormones, such as thyroid hormone, seems likely since the induced levels of G6PDH mRNA in hepatocytes in culture was one-third of that observed in refed rats.  相似文献   

3.
The regulation of flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) and pyruvate carboxylase (PC) by fatty acids and glucagon was studied in situ, in intact hepatocyte suspensions. The rate of pyruvate metabolized by carboxylation plus decarboxylation was determined from the incorporation of [1-14C]pyruvate into 14CO2 plus [14C]glucose. The flux through PDH was determined from the rate of formation of 14CO2 from [1-14C]pyruvate corrected for other decarboxylation reactions (citrate cycle, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and malic enzyme), and the flux through PC was determined by subtracting the flux through PDH from the total pyruvate metabolized. With 0.5 mM pyruvate as substrate the ratio of flux through PDH/PC was 1.9 in hepatocytes from fed rats and 1.4 in hepatocytes from 24 h-starved rats. In hepatocytes from fed rats, octanoate (0.8 mM) and palmitate (0.5 mM) increased the flux through PDH (59-76%) and PC (80-83%) without altering the PDH/PC flux ratios. Glucagon did not affect the flux through PDH but it increased the flux through PC twofold, thereby decreasing the PDH/PC flux ratio to the value of hepatocytes from starved rats. In hepatocytes from starved rats, fatty acids had similar effects on pyruvate metabolism as in hepatocytes from fed rats, however glucagon did not increase the flux through PC. 2[5(4-Chlorophenyl)pentyl]oxirane-2-carboxylate (100 microM) an inhibitor of carnitine palmitoyl transferase I, reversed the palmitate-stimulated but not the octanoate-stimulated flux through PDH, in cells from fed rats, indicating that the effects of fatty acids on PDH are secondary to the beta-oxidation of fatty acids. This inhibitor also reversed the stimulatory effect of palmitate on PC and partially inhibited the flux through PC in the presence of octanoate suggesting an effect of POCA independent of fatty acid oxidation. It is concluded that the effects of fatty acids on pyruvate metabolism are probably secondary to increased pyruvate uptake by mitochondria in exchange for acetoacetate. Glucagon favours the partitioning of pyruvate towards carboxylation, by increasing the flux through pyruvate carboxylase, without directly inhibiting the flux through PDH.  相似文献   

4.
The work investigated the mechanisms for modulation of renal and hepatic pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDH) activities after carbohydrate re-feeding of 48 h-starved rats, and identified a regulatory role for tri-iodothyronine. Glucose re-feeding decreased blood concentrations of lipid fuels in both euthyroid and hyperthyroid rats. This treatment was not associated with re-activation of hepatic PDH in either group of rats, or of renal PDH in hyperthyroid rats (where activity was already high), but it increased renal PDH in euthyroid rats. Dichloroacetate (DCA), an activator of PDH kinase, increased renal PDH activities in euthyroid rats, but not hyperthyroid rats, and effects of glucose re-feeding or hyperthyroidism were no longer apparent. These treatments therefore exert their effects on renal PDH through changes in PDH kinase. DCA re-activation of hepatic PDH was more marked in hyperthyroid than in euthyroid rats, suggesting that, under conditions of inhibited kinase activity, PDH phosphatase is more active in livers of hyperthyroid rats. The limited effect of DCA on hepatic PDH in euthyroid rats was potentiated by glucose re-feeding or insulin, but not by inhibition of lipolysis, demonstrating a direct effect of insulin to increase hepatic PDH phosphatase. Glucose re-feeding, inhibition of lipolysis or insulin administration did not increase hepatic PDH in DCA-treated hyperthyroid rats, indicating that effects of hyperthyroidism and of insulin on PDH phosphatase are not additive.  相似文献   

5.
Starvation increased pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) kinase activity in extracts of freshly excised rat soleus 2.2-fold (from 0.6 min-1 in fed rats to 1.31 min-1 in 48-h-starved rats). In fed rats, activities were unchanged following 24 h of culture in medium 199, but increased 2.1-fold on 24 h of culture with 50 microM dibutyryl cAMP plus 1 mM n-octanoate and 1.6-1.7-fold with either agent alone. Approx. 70% of the increase in PDH kinase induced by starvation was lost following 24 h of culture in medium 199; the loss was prevented by 50 microM dibutyryl cAMP plus 1 mM n-octanoate. cAMP concentrations in fresh soleus muscle were 1 nmol/g (fed rats) and 1.6 nmol/g (starved rats). After 20-60 min of culture the fed-starved difference disappeared and [cAMP] fell to 0.4 nmol/g. Calcitonin-gene-related peptide (CGRP) increased cAMP 3-fold; the increase was maintained throughout 24 h of culture, but was readily reversed at 30 min or 24 h of culture by 60-min incubation with CGRP-free medium. Starvation of the rat (48 h) had no effect on the sensitivity of soleus towards the [cAMP]-increasing effect of CGRP. It is concluded that culture may reverse effects of starvation on PDH kinase activity by lowering cAMP and by removal from the in vivo effects of circulating free fatty acids; and that starvation and CGRP had no detectable long-term effects on the cAMP system in soleus muscle.  相似文献   

6.
The hyperinsulinaemic-glucose-clamp technique, in combination with measurement of glucose turnover in conscious unrestrained rats, was used to assess the effects of nutritional status on insulin sensitivity in vivo and glucose metabolism. Liver, heart and quadriceps skeletal-muscle glycogen content and activities of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) and glycogen synthase were measured both basally and at the end of a 2.5 h glucose clamp (insulin 85 munits/h) in rats 6, 24 and 48 h after food withdrawal. Clamp glucose requirement and glucose turnover were unchanged by fasting. Activation of glycogen synthase and glycogen deposition in liver and skeletal muscle during the clamps were also not impaired in rats after a prolonged fast. By contrast with skeletal muscle, activation of cardiac-muscle glycogen synthase and glycogen deposition during the clamps were markedly impaired by 24 h of fasting and were undetectable at 48 h. Skeletal-muscle PDH activity fell with more prolonged fasting (6 h, 15.3 +/- 3.4%; 24 h, 4.7 +/- 0.7%; 48 h, 4.3 +/- 0.6% active; P less than 0.005), but at 24 and 48 h was stimulated by the clamp to values unchanged by the duration of fasting. Stimulation of cardiac PDH activity by the clamp was, however, impaired in rats fasted for 24 or 48 h. Basal hepatic PDH did not change significantly with fasting (6 h, 5.3 +/- 1.1%; 24 h, 4.6 +/- 0.7%; 48 h, 3.9 +/- 0.5%), and, although it could be partly restored at 24 h, very little stimulation occurred at 48 h. Hepatic pyruvate kinase and acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity were both stimulated by the clamps, and this was not impaired with more prolonged fasting. During the glucose clamps, blood concentrations of lactate, pyruvate and alanine were increased to a greater extent in rats fasted for 24 and 48 h than in rats studied 6 h after food withdrawal. The findings suggest that, although sensitivity to insulin of whole-body glucose disposal is unchanged with fasting, there may be qualitative differences in the metabolism of glucose.  相似文献   

7.
In L6 skeletal muscle cells and immortalized hepatocytes, insulin induced a 2-fold increase in the activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex. This effect was almost completely blocked by the protein kinase C (PKC) delta inhibitor Rottlerin and by PKCdelta antisense oligonucleotides. At variance, overexpression of wild-type PKCdelta or of an active PKCdelta mutant induced PDH complex activity in both L6 and liver cells. Insulin stimulation of the activity of the PDH complex was accompanied by a 2.5-fold increase in PDH phosphatases 1 and 2 (PDP1/2) activity with no change in the activity of PDH kinase. PKCdelta antisense blocked insulin activation of PDP1/2, the same as with PDH. In insulin-exposed cells, PDP1/2 activation was paralleled by activation and mitochondrial translocation of PKCdelta, as revealed by cell subfractionation and confocal microscopy studies. The mitochondrial translocation of PKCdelta, like its activation, was prevented by Rottlerin. In extracts from insulin-stimulated cells, PKCdelta co-precipitated with PDP1/2. PKCdelta also bound to PDP1/2 in overlay blots, suggesting that direct PKCdelta-PDP interaction may occur in vivo as well. In intact cells, insulin exposure determined PDP1/2 phosphorylation, which was specifically prevented by PKCdelta antisense. PKCdelta also phosphorylated PDP in vitro, followed by PDP1/2 activation. Thus, in muscle and liver cells, insulin causes activation and mitochondrial translocation of PKCdelta, accompanied by PDP phosphorylation and activation. These events are necessary for insulin activation of the PDH complex in these cells.  相似文献   

8.
We have recently reported that the "in situ" myocardial concentrations of the active form of the Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex (PDHa) were significantly decreased in hearts obtained from normal rats fed for 3 weeks on an isocaloric sucrose rich (63%) diet (SRD) when compared to age matched controls fed on the standard laboratory chow (STD). Since, on the one hand SRD rats present glucose intolerance and impaired "in vivo" insulin action and, on the other hand the effects of insulin on the interconversion of heart PDH remains a controversial matter, we found it relevant to study the effects of insulin on the PDH complex in the "in vitro" perfused (Langendorff technique) heart preparations obtained from SRD rats. After a 35 minute perfusion period with 5.5 mM glucose as the only nutrient in the perfusate, PDHa as a percentage of total PDH was found to remain significantly lower in SRD hearts (M +/- SEM 32.6 +/- 2.3) when compared to STD hearts (68.3 +/- 4.6, P less than 0.05) in spite of comparable total PDH activities in both groups of animals. Although the addition of insulin to the perfusate (20 mu/ml) resulted in a significant increase in the percentage of PDHa (45.8 +/- 3.4) of SRD heart, values attained still remained significantly lower than those obtained in STD controls (67.5 +/- 3.6; P less than 0.05). Simultaneously, the addition of insulin to the perfusate, significantly reduced the Acetyl-CoA/CoASH ratio in SRD hearts although this ratio remained still much higher than those observed in STD controls under the same experimental conditions.  相似文献   

9.
1. The effect of insulin (0.5, 10 and 50 munits/ml of perfusate) on glucose uptake and disposal in skeletal muscle was studied in the isolated perfused hindquarter of obese (fa/fa) and lean (Fa/Fa) Zucker rats and Osborne-Mendel rats. 2. A concentration of 0.5 munit of insulin/ml induced a significant increase in glucose uptake (approx. 2.5 mumol/min per 30 g of muscle) in lean Zucker rats and in Osborne-Mendel rats, and 10 munits of insulin/ml caused a further increase to approx. 6 mumol/min per 30 g of muscle; but 50 munits of insulin/ml had no additional stimulatory effect. In contrast, in obese Zucker rats only 10 and 50 munits of insulin/ml had a stimulatory effect on glucose uptake, the magnitude of which was decreased by 50-70% when compared with either lean control group. Since under no experimental condition tested was an accumulation of free glucose in muscle-cell water observed, the data suggest an impairment of insulin-stimulated glucose transport across the muscle-cell membrane in obese Zucker rats. 3. The intracellular disposal of glucose in skeletal muscle of obese Zucker rats was also insulin-insensitive: even at insulin concentrations that clearly stimulated glucose uptake, no effect of insulin on lactate oxidation (nor an inhibitory effect on alanine release) was observed; [14C]glucose incorporation into skeletal-muscle lipids was stimulated by 50 munits of insulin/ml, but the rate was still only 10% of that observed in lean Zucker rats. 4. The data indicate that the skeletal muscle of obese Zucker rats is insulin-resistant with respect to both glucose-transport mechanisms and intracellular pathways of glucose metabolism, such as lactate oxidation. The excessive degree of insulin-insensitivity in skeletal muscle of obese Zucker rats may represent a causal factor in the development of the glucose intolerance in this species.  相似文献   

10.
1. The results of this study indicates that the binding of insulin to brain plasma membranes activates a membrane protease which, by a trypsin like mechanism, produces a soluble factor that modulates the PDH behaviour when added to brain mitochondria. 2. The supernatant from brain plasma membranes incubated with 0.5 mg/ml trypsin added to mitochondria increases PDH activity levels and cancels PDH inhibition by NaF, as has already been seen when the plasma membranes are incubated with 25 microU/ml insulin. No such effects are obtained when the incubation is run out with 0.5 mg/ml chymotrypsin. 3. The supernatants from insulin or trypsin treated plasma membranes retain their activating properties on mitochondrial PDH also after dansylation; from these preparations a dansylated active on PDH material was separated by monodimensional chromatography on HPTLC silica Gel plates, using chloroform/1-butanol (93:7 v/v) as a solvent. 4. Insulin incubation of plasma membranes pretreated with protease inhibitors (leupeptin, phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride) or with exogenous trypsin, but not chymotrypsin substrates (esters of arginine and tyrosine) yields an inactive supernatant on PDH. 5. Insulin treated plasma membrane supernatants lose all stimulating properties on PDH after incubation for 1 hr with 2 mg/ml trypsin or chymotrypsin.  相似文献   

11.
Addition of vasopressin (100 nM) to rat hepatocytes prelabelled with [3H]inositol stimulated the production of inositol phosphates in the presence of 20 mM Li+. Preincubation of hepatocytes with insulin (50 nM) or glucagon (10 nM) had no significant effect alone but enhanced the effects of vasopressin after a lag period of at least 1 min. The effects of insulin and glucagon appeared additive in this respect. Insulin also enhanced the norepinephrine-mediated stimulation of inositol phosphate accumulation. The enhancement by insulin of the effects of vasopressin required at least 0.5-5 nM insulin and did not involve changes in [3H]inositol lipid labelling or IP3 phosphatase activity. The effect of insulin appeared insensitive to prior treatment of hepatocytes with pertussis toxin (200 ng/ml for 18-24 h) or cholera toxin (100 ng/ml for 3-4 h). The glucagon enhancement of the effects of vasopressin was not affected by pertussis toxin but was mimicked by cholera toxin. The response of hepatocytes to vasopressin in the absence of Li+ was smaller and more transient. Under these conditions a 5 min prior incubation with insulin inhibited the stimulation by vasopressin of inositol phosphate accumulation. A similar inhibitory effect of prior insulin exposure on the transient activation by vasopressin of exogenous phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate breakdown by hepatocyte homogenates was also seen. These data indicate that insulin, although having no effect on basal inositol phosphate accumulation, can either enhance or antagonise the effects of vasopressin in primary rat liver hepatocyte cultures depending on the experimental conditions.  相似文献   

12.
The activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex and PDH kinase were measured in brown adipose tissue (BAT) of 4-week-gold thioglucose (GTG)-obese mice. The proportion of PDH complex in the active dephosphorylated form was 2-fold higher in BAT of post-absorptive obese mice compared with lean controls. This result was consistent with the higher circulating insulin concentration observed in GTG-obese mice. In both obese and lean mice the PDH-complex activity in BAT decreased after 24 h starvation and increased in response to supraphysiological insulin injection, indicating that the PDH complex is insulin-responsive in BAT of GTG-obese mice. There was no difference in the PDH kinase activity of BAT in post-absorptive or insulin-injected lean and obese mice, suggesting that the higher PDH-complex activity in obese mice was not due to decreased PDH kinase activity. There is no evidence for a decreased activity of PDH complex contributing to insulin resistance in BAT of 4-week-GTG-obese mice.  相似文献   

13.
In vivo studies have demonstrated that the liver is the main site of insulin resistance in hyperthyroidism. To further investigate the effect of thyroid hormone in the liver, we have incubated primary cultures of rat hepatocytes in the presence and absence of triiodothyronine (T3) 1 ng/ml and 5 ng/ml for 20 hr. Without affecting basal activity, T3 5 ng/ml decreased insulin-stimulated (1 x 10(-7) M) lipid synthesis but not insulin-stimulated alpha-aminoisobutyric acid uptake. These changes occur in the absence of any abnormalities in 125I-insulin binding, degradation, internalization or insulin receptors structure as determined by affinity-labeling methods. However, basal insulin receptor kinase activity using Glu4: Tyrl as phospho-acceptor was decreased by T3 without altering its insulin responsiveness. These results demonstrate the heterogeneity of T3's effects at the postinsulin binding level in the liver.  相似文献   

14.
Hepatocytes were isolated from preweaned neonatal and adult rats and maintained in primary monolayer culture. Cells from preweaned newborns possessed no L-type pyruvate kinase, nor did they synthesize the enzyme. Incubation for 48-72 h in culture medium supplemented with 2 mM-fructose and 0.1 microM-insulin induced the synthesis of L-type pyruvate kinase, as judged by increased enzyme activity and the increased incorporation of [3H]leucine into immunoprecipitable L-type pyruvate kinase. Hepatocytes isolated from 48 h-starved adult rats incorporated less [3H]leucine into L-type pyruvate kinase than did cells isolated from high-carbohydrate-diet-fed rats. The rate of enzyme synthesis by cells from 48 h-starved rats was increased by the inclusion of fructose and insulin in the incubation medium, after a lag phase of 24-48 h. After 4 days in culture in the presence of fructose and insulin, hepatocytes from 48 h-starved rats synthesized L-type pyruvate kinase at similar rates to hepatocytes isolated from high-carbohydrate-diet-fed rats.  相似文献   

15.
We have previously demonstrated the ability of the sulfonylurea tolazamide to potentiate insulin action in primary cultures of hepatocytes prepared from normal and streptozotocin-diabetic rats. To determine whether the pirogliride derivative linogliride, a non-sulfonylurea orally effective hypoglycemic agent, can potentiate insulin action, we evaluated the ability of linogliride to affect insulin-stimulated lipogenesis in primary cultures of hepatocytes prepared from normal rats. In addition, we also evaluated the ability of the sulfonylurea chlorpropamide to affect insulin-stimulated lipogenesis in the same in vitro system. The exposure of hepatocytes for 18 h to either linogliride (100 ug/ml) or chlorpropamide (175 ug/ml) resulted in dose-dependent (0.1 to 100 nM insulin) increases in insulin-stimulated lipogenesis, although the effects of chlorpropamide are approximately two times those of linogliride. This increase in insulin responsiveness was not associated with any change in insulin sensitivity (ED50) or insulin binding. The results provide evidence for an extra-pancreatic effect of linogliride and chlorpropamide in the liver and indicate that these structurally unrelated oral hypoglycemic agents enhance insulin responsiveness through postbinding mechanisms.  相似文献   

16.
To determine the relative contributions of glucose, insulin, dexamethasone, and triiodothyronine to the induction of hepatic glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, hepatocytes isolated from normal or adrenalectomized rats, either fasted or fed, were examined in culture. Addition of insulin (42 milliunits/ml, 0.9 microM) and dexamethasone (1 microM) to hepatocytes obtained from 3-day-fasted rats and cultured for 48 h in serum-free Dulbecco's medium resulted in a 7- to 11-fold increase in Glc-6-P dehydrogenase specific activity compared with a 2- to 3-fold increase in activity in control cultures incubated without added hormones. The effects of insulin and dexamethasone were independent of DNA synthesis, dose-dependent, and additive; each contributing about one-half of the total response. Medium glucose was neither sufficient nor necessary for the insulin- or dexamethasone-stimulated increase in Glc-6-P dehydrogenase specific activity. Addition of triiodothyronine (10 microM) preferentially blocked the dexamethasone-stimulated increase in Glc-6-P dehydrogenase specific activity. Insulin failed to stimulate the induction of Glc-6-P dehydrogenase in hepatocytes obtained from normal fed rats or from fasted and fed adrenalectomized rats. However, insulin caused a significant increase in the Glc-6-P dehydrogenase specific activity of these cells when dexamethasone was concurrently added to the culture medium.  相似文献   

17.
The hormonal regulation of the relative rate of synthesis and mRNA of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH; EC 1.1.1.49) was studied in primary cultures of adult-rat liver parenchymal cells maintained in a chemically defined medium. Maintenance of hepatocytes from starved animals in a culture medium devoid of any hormones resulted in a 4-fold increase in the relative rate of G6PDH synthesis in 48 h. Parallel cultures treated with glucocorticoids alone exhibited a rate of G6PDH synthesis comparable with that in the control cultures, whereas insulin alone caused a 6.5-fold increase in the rate of synthesis in 48 h. However, if the cultures were treated with glucocorticoids and insulin simultaneously, a 13-fold increase in the rate of synthesis was observed. The effect of ethanol, alone and in combination with the hormones, on the relative rate of G6PDH synthesis was studied also. Ethanol alone caused an 8-fold increase in the rate of synthesis in 48 h, whereas the combination of ethanol, glucocorticoid and insulin caused a 25-fold increase. The amount of functional mRNA encoding G6PDH, as measured in a cell-free translation system, was compared with enzyme activity and relative rate of enzyme synthesis. The increases in G6PDH activity and relative rate of synthesis in primary cultures of hepatocytes treated with ethanol, alone and in combination with the glucocorticoids and insulin, were paralleled by comparable increases in G6PDH mRNA. The results of this study show that the glucocorticoids acted in a permissive manner to amplify the insulin stimulation of G6PDH synthesis and that insulin, glucocorticoids and ethanol interact to stimulate synthesis of G6PDH primarily by increasing the concentration of functional G6PDH mRNA.  相似文献   

18.
Glycogen synthesis in hepatocyte cultures is dependent on: (1) the nutritional state of the donor rat, (2) the acinar origin of the hepatocytes, (3) the concentrations of glucose and gluconeogenic precursors, and (4) insulin. High concentrations of glucose (15-25 mM) and gluconeogenic precursors (10 mM-lactate and 1 mM-pyruvate) had a synergistic effect on glycogen deposition in both periportal and perivenous hepatocytes. When hepatocytes were challenged with glucose, lactate and pyruvate in the absence of insulin, glycogen was deposited at a linear rate for 2 h and then reached a plateau. However, in the presence of insulin, the initial rate of glycogen deposition was increased (20-40%) and glycogen deposition continued for more than 4 h. Consequently, insulin had a more marked effect on the glycogen accumulated in the cell after 4 h (100-200% increase) than on the initial rate of glycogen deposition. Glycogen accumulation in hepatocyte cultures prepared from rats that were fasted for 24 h and then re-fed for 3 h before liver perfusion was 2-fold higher than in hepatocytes from rats fed ad libitum and 4-fold higher than in hepatocytes from fasted rats. The incorporation of [14C]lactate into glycogen was 2-4-fold higher in periportal than in perivenous hepatocytes in both the absence and the presence of insulin, whereas the incorporation of [14C]glucose into glycogen was similar in periportal and perivenous hepatocytes in the absence of insulin, but higher in perivenous hepatocytes in the presence of insulin. Rates of glycogen deposition in the combined presence of glucose and gluconeogenic precursors were similar in periportal and perivenous hepatocytes, whereas in the presence of glucose alone, rates of glycogen deposition paralleled the incorporation of [14C]glucose into glycogen and were higher in perivenous hepatocytes in the presence of insulin. It is concluded that periportal and perivenous hepatocytes utilize different substrates for glycogen synthesis, but differences between the two cell populations in the relative utilization of glucose and gluconeogenic precursors are dependent on the presence of insulin and on the nutritional state of the rat.  相似文献   

19.
Recent studies with viral oncogene tyrosine kinases have suggested that these kinases may phosphorylate phosphoinositides and diacylglycerol. Since the receptors for insulin and epidermal growth factor (EGF) also possess tyrosine kinase activity, we have investigated possible effects of insulin and EGF on phosphoinositide metabolism in rat liver plasma membranes and rat hepatocytes. In plasma membranes prepared from rats injected 18 h prior with [3H]myo-inositol or incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP, phosphatidylinositol-4-P and phosphatidylinositol-4,5-P2 were formed, but there were no effects of either insulin or EGF although these agents stimulated protein tyrosine phosphorylation. In hepatocytes incubated with [3H]myo-inositol, label was incorporated into phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylinositol-4-P, and phosphatidylinositol-4,5-P2, but there was no effect of insulin. Incubation of hepatocytes with [3H]myo-inositol plus insulin or EGF for 2 h also did not alter the formation of [3H]myo-inositol-1,4,5-P3 from [3H]phosphatidylinositol-4,5-P2 induced by vasopressin. These findings suggest that the tyrosine kinase activity of liver insulin and EGF receptors is not important in phosphoinositide formation.  相似文献   

20.
1. The in vivo and in vitro conditions which allow a response of rat circulating lymphocyte PDH to insulin are investigated. 2. In vivo tests show that inactive PDH (PDHi) prevails in diabetic rats and active PDH (PDHa) in hyperinsulinemic rats; in treated with insulin diabetic rats the PDHa/PDHi ratio (1.7) is similar to that of normal rats (PDHa/PDHi ratio = 2). 3. In vitro tests show a responsiveness of PDH to insulin only when 50 microM Ca2+ -Mg2+ and intact lymphocytes are used in the incubation medium. Insulin concentrations and contact time are important variables.  相似文献   

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